I know there are already Gmail alternatives in the pinned post, Protonmail and Tutanota. I've experimented a bit with both of them, and both Tutanota or the free Protonmail are out of the question since I can't use them with Thunderbird, so I don't have a convenient way to keep all my mails stored in case my account gets deleted or I get locked out of it. And getting locked out of it, I already have once for Tutanota, right after making my account, for no reason, and it took me three days to get it back after sending a mail from another address.
Disroot seems good enough, at least for communication. But for making accounts for official stuff, I'm still a bit worried that I could lose access to my account before an important mail has been downloaded, or that I'd be unable to recover a password or contact some important service if something happens to my account, so I'm wondering whether I'd need something… "Bigger". A service that has less chance of going bankrupt and being discontinued, but without being google. I'l considering "laposte .net".
Any thoughts? Do you guys think I'm right, or do you think using more open-source and privacy friendly stuff for everything is completely safe?
laposte did belong to French state. after its privatisation, iirc, the state is still the biggest share holder
there is no encryption either
I can’t see how laposte is better than google
the solution to your problem seems to be owning your own domain and forwarding to whatever service you use at that moment. This way you wouldn’t need to change all your subscriptions, but just the forwarding.
laposte 🤣 no way!
Yeah, I known their not ideal, but as I said, it’s mainly for creating accounts or managing online paperworks, so it’s not like I’d be managing any info on there that the state doesn’t have an easier way of getting. The plan was still to start using either Tutanota or Disroot for personal communication. Beside, I already need to use some of La Poste’s online services for work… Still, thank you, I’m looking into the services with personnal domain…